The salt-inducible kinase, SIK, is induced by depolarization in brain

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Abstract

Membrane depolarization of neurons is thought to lead to changes in gene expression that modulate neuronal plasticity. We used representational difference analysis to identify a group of cDNAs that are induced by membrane depolarization or by forskolin, but not by neurotrophins or growth factors, in PC12 pheochromocytoma cells. One of these genes, SIK (salt-inducible kinase), is a member of the sucrose-nonfermenting 1 protein kinase/AMP- activated protein kinase protein kinase family that was also recently identified from the adrenal gland of rats treated with high-salt diets. SIK mRNA is induced up to eightfold in specific regions of the hippocampus and cortex in rats, following systemic kainic acid administration and seizure induction.

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Feldman, J. D., Vician, L., Crispino, M., Hoe, W., Baudry, M., & Herschman, H. R. (2000). The salt-inducible kinase, SIK, is induced by depolarization in brain. Journal of Neurochemistry, 74(6), 2227–2238. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1471-4159.2000.0742227.x

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